wenglund wrote:Even were I to borrow from scholars and craft a rather elaborate and perhaps convincing argument that bits and pieces of the Book of Abraham were likely not known at the time Joseph produced it; and were I to also develop an convinving argument that the bits and pieces that were knowable during that time, it would have been unfeasible to have cobbled the 15 or so pages of the Book of Abraham together in such hodge-podge fashion from all the different available source material; this would merely amount to circumstantial evidence. It would not directly evince that the Book of Abraham was produce supernaturalistically.
why do you think it would be be unfeasible for a writer to creatively put those pages together? Smith, and his group, had a long history of being tenactiously creative in all his interests and endeveours. He is a remarkable study as to how a person could manifest his ambitions during a puritan era of history. If he were alive today his catch phrase might read, "Go big or go home."
He obviously had both an interest in egyptian history and also access to information surrounding egyptian folklore because he purchased the egyptian funeral papyri from someone, giving him not only at least one source but an apparent financial interest as well. It cost money to purchase the text and a driving interest of some type most certainly motivated him.
wenglund wrote:At best, the circumstantial evidence may provide room for faith that the Book of Abraham was translated by the gift and power of God.
The problem with this is myriad, but I'll describe just a few points.
Let's say you're right and that Joseph Smith was given a gift and power from God to translate the funeral papyrus. Let's say that Mormons are correct in that this feat qualifies him as a prophet and revelator.
How do you account for a prophet, whose role is to "get information right" as a gift from God - To get information from God - To be a mouthpiece for God - to clarify Gods wisdom as a role of a revealer and prophet - and yet get many glaring and significant pieces of information wrong?
This makes a mockery out of the very all-knowing God that allegedly gave him the information, for whom Joseph Smith is a prophet.
If God is a omniscient God He would have known the papyrus was a funeral text and yet this same God led Joseph Smith to believe that the papyrus was the book of Abraham and didn't correct him. For decades, and even to this day, the prophets have not come forward to clear up this important bit of incorrect information.
What kind of God is this? This is only one of the examples of the errors that God revealed and which God has not subsequently corrected through his prophets. It defeats the purpose of a prophet and revelator when God does not give accurate information to his prophet.
What is the purpose then of a Mormon prophet and revelator?
wenglund wrote:And, while the same is pretty much true for the supernaturalistic explanation, that explanation has historical and other evidence that the naturalistic theories do not. It has the statements of the principles involved (witness statements tend to weigh heavier than circumstrantial evidence) and confirmation from God.
You’re saying that people’s word has more weight than the word of God?
If the witness’s statements for the Book of Abraham is anything like the Book of Mormon witness’s affidavits they hold no credibility. Those "credible" people were invested with Smith up to the eyeballs. In those days a man’s word was his honor and they made deals based on a hand shake and their honor as gentlemen. For any of those men to go back on any of their words, statements and affidavits would have been certain social suicide and community blacklisting; and perhaps tarred and feathered – yet again. Having gone through that once (or twice) I’m sure Joseph Smith and his group weren’t interested in a repeat, or worse, a vigilante lynching. I can imagine it was like quicksand, once in it's not easy to extract oneself. How does one backtrack in a Puritan era and say you were untrue?
They were thrown out of communities because they weren’t upstanding men of honor; their word wasn’t any good. They had bad reputations on the whole as untrustworthy. A reputation for lying means that it's difficult to view them credible. See my tag line for more detailed information on the history of lying.
Without credible witness statements and lack of credible evidence coupled with a glaring presence of errors, where can a confirmation of God possibly fit into your scenario?
You have thrown God into a real pickle by involving Him in your Mormon mess. Or more appropriately, Joseph Smith threw God into a real pickle and you continue the Mormon legacy.